By Christopher Orlet on 3.11.05 @ 12:07AM
What better to propagate than liberal democracy, freedom, and human rights?
"Talk much about a thing," said H.H. Brackenridge, "and you will
put it into the people's heads." Today Brackenridge, one of the
lesser Founding Fathers, is forgotten, but his words should remind
us of the continuing importance of propaganda.
I mean propaganda in the Latinate sense, as in "things to be
spread or extended to a broader area or larger number." The
original propagandist was the Roman Catholic Church through its
Congregation for Propagating the Faith, later the College of
Propaganda. The mission of the College was not to spread
disinformation, but to propagate Christianity in the newly
discovered Western Hemisphere, Asia, and Africa. It wasn't until
the word became corrupted with the stench of politics in the
mid-19th century that it began to take on a negative connotation.
William Safire in Safire's New Political Dictionary notes
that "current usage is definitely pejorative" and that propaganda
is "one of the few [words] that mean the same to both Communists
and anti-Communists."
But if we concentrate on propaganda's original meaning, "that
which ought to be propagated," we might ask ourselves what better
to spread than liberal democracy, freedom, and human rights? And
who better to do the spreading than the people with the biggest,
baddest metaphorical pitchfork?
Liberals not only cringe at the use of the P-word -- with its
associations to Nazi depictions of the verminous Jew or American
wartime propaganda of the menacing, bespectacled, and bucktoothed
Jap -- but they recoil at anything resembling ethnocentrism or the
idea that America (or The West) is somehow superior to war-torn,
starvation-plagued, Islamo-Fascist hellholes like Darfur. Liberals
do not regard America's brand of liberal democracy as something we
need to be exporting. To many libs the U.S. remains a racist
country with rigged elections, one whose military tortures innocent
Iraqi civilians and whose government wants to rob grandma of her
Social Security check. Who are we to impose such loathsome values
on other nations? What liberals prefer to ignore is that many of
these hapless wretches would sell their left kidney and half their
liver to get into the U.S. in order to be exposed to such loathsome
U.S. values.
The sad irony of U.S. foreign relations is that America is one
of the few nations actually doing something to bring freedom to
Islamo-fascist hellholes like the former Afghanistan, and yet it is
often resented for just this reason. The helpless often resent
those that provide assistance. Men in particular. Receiving help
from an Alpha country like the U.S. can be an emasculating
experience, so it is not surprising that Americans are resented.
I'm not sure what psychologists call this condition, but I call it
the Canada Complex. The fact that their southern neighbor is the
world's superpower and they are 90-pound weaklings makes Canada (or
France or Germany) feel like helpless girlie men. Britain is less
susceptible to this malady, because despite being a tiny island, it
can more than take care of itself militarily, and considers itself
intellectually and culturally superior to the U.S. Also the two
countries largely share the same values.
None of this need distract the U.S. from the important job of
spreading freedom and democracy abroad. But there needs to be ways
to accomplish this other than flying in the troops. Until recently
there was. It was called the United States Information Agency.
Launched by President Truman as the Cold War began to heat up,
USIA's primary mission was to spread the truth about the U.S. and
combat mostly Communist disinformation. In an op-ed piece last month in the Washington
Post, four former USIA directors noted that until recently
every U.S. embassy was staffed with a USIA officer whose job it was
to recruit U.S. friendly academics, journalists, and intellectuals.
It was the task of these recruits to represent America's positions
to their host country's opinion leaders and media representatives.
The pro-democracy movements that led to the fall of the Soviet
Union and the Berlin Wall were greatly encouraged by the work of
the USIA. As America has begrudgingly learned since 9-11, the
fierce and bloody battle for hearts and minds is just as important
as the battle for Baghdad.
With the end of the Cold War, however, the USIA was seen as
expendable and its budget and operations were slashed dramatically.
The results of this shortsightedness are evident in the vehement
anti-Americanism seen nightly on television news. How bad is it?
Shortly after 9-11, but long before the invasion of Iraq, Secretary
of State Colin Powell appeared on European MTV. One of the first
questions from a Norwegian student was, "How does it feel to
represent a country commonly perceived as the Satan of contemporary
politics?"
America needs to propagate its message of freedom and democracy
and counter its negative image abroad. The U.S. government cannot
expect Norwegian students and Iraqi insurgents to tune into Voice
of America or read The American Spectator Online. Most of
the world's population gets but one view of America from their
native media, a media run by emasculated pseudo-intellectuals.
Liberty and freedom are too important to leave to people with no
knowledge or experience of either.
topics:
Television, Social Security, Islam, Founding Fathers, Military, Iraq, Africa, Oil